Roofing Services

Commercial Re-Roofing in Billings, MT

Scope Focus

Commercial Re-Roofing in Billings, MT is scoped from roof evidence first, then organized into repair, replacement, maintenance, coating, or monitoring recommendations.

What We Check

  • Roof area, access, and drainage behavior
  • Membrane, flashing, edge, and penetration conditions
  • Storm exposure, moisture clues, and scheduling limits
Commercial Re-Roofing in Billings, MT

Commercial Re-Roofing in Billings, MT begins with a structural load check. Before any tear-off is priced, the building's roof deck capacity must be verified against the weight of the proposed new assembly — new insulation, cover board, membrane, ballast if applicable, and any required drainage improvements. For commercial re-roofing in Billings, Yellowstone County, Laurel, Lockwood, and the I-90/I-94 corridor, the code also controls how many membrane layers can remain on the deck: most jurisdictions follow the two-layer maximum specified in the International Building Code, which means full tear-off may be required even when the top membrane looks serviceable.

Insulation is the largest cost driver in commercial re-roofing after tear-off labor. Energy codes in MT — whether Title 24, ASHRAE 90.1, or a local supplement — set minimum R-value targets for roof assemblies above conditioned space. A commercial re-roofing project that does not meet the current energy code may require additional insulation thickness to obtain a permit, which changes the scope, the deck load, and the tapered insulation design around drains. Commercial Roofers of Montana works through those calculations before presenting a commercial re-roofing budget so the number in the estimate reflects the actual permitted scope.

Permit documentation for commercial re-roofing in Billings typically requires product data sheets, a roof plan or sketch showing drainage and slopes, a disposal plan for tear-off material, and sometimes a structural engineer review letter when the new assembly is heavier than the existing one. We assemble that documentation package and coordinate with the building department on the inspection schedule so the commercial re-roofing project closes without a certificate-of-occupancy hold.

Warranty implications matter for commercial re-roofing decisions. A roof manufacturer will not extend a new system warranty over a tear-off site with an unaddressed deck repair or compromised substrate. We document deck conditions found during tear-off, provide photographic evidence of substrate quality, and give ownership the information needed to decide whether manufacturer warranty coverage is worth the additional substrate repair cost. Call 406-645-5288 or email bids@commercialroofersmontana.com to schedule a commercial re-roofing assessment in Billings.

Questions Owners Ask

What triggers the need for commercial re-roofing versus repair?

Widespread wet insulation, a second membrane layer already present, deck deterioration, repeated failed repairs, and energy code compliance gaps on a permit-requiring scope all push toward full re-roofing.

How does energy code affect commercial re-roofing costs?

ASHRAE 90.1 or state-specific energy codes set minimum insulation R-values that may require added insulation thickness beyond what the existing assembly provides, increasing both cost and structural load.

What does commercial re-roofing permitting require?

Product data sheets, a roof plan or sketch, a disposal plan, sometimes a structural engineer review, and contractor licensing documentation. We assemble the permit package and coordinate the inspection schedule.

How is the tear-off scope determined for commercial re-roofing?

Membrane layer count, deck condition found during inspection, moisture scan results, and the code-required maximum layer count all determine whether full tear-off or partial removal is required.

Questions owners ask

Access, wet insulation, deck condition, drainage, edge metal, rooftop equipment, safety setup, and occupied-building limits can all change the recommended scope.
Often it can, but the sequence has to account for entrances, loading docks, tenants, odor sensitivity, noise, weather windows, and safe roof access.
Typical notes include roof areas, photos, observed conditions, priority levels, budget drivers, access constraints, and the recommended next step.
We compare those paths by moisture risk, deck condition, attachment, roof age, drainage, edge details, warranty path, and budget timing.